Jennifer M. Randles (Editor) Jennifer M. Randles is Professor in the Department of Sociology at California State University, Fresno, and author of Essential Dads: The Inequalities and Politics of Fathering. Kerry Woodward (Editor) Kerry Woodward is Professor of Sociology at California State University, Long Beach. She is the author of Pimping the Welfare System: Empowering Participants with Economic, Social, and Cultural Capital.
""Policing Not Protecting Families is an eye-opening and uniquely interdisciplinary interrogation of this country's child welfare system. This incisive book conceptualizes the contemporary child welfare - or rather, family policing - system as both a continuation of the racialized and gendered family separation practices that forged the modern United States and as a central cog in the machinery of neoliberal poverty governance. Captivating, capacious, and empirically rich, these deeply researched case studies interweave to issue a vivid indictment of the systems supposedly in place to protect families. Moreover, they reveal the limits of policy reforms and illuminate the need for a radical re-envisioning of what it takes to keep families safe, whole, and thriving.""-- ""Hana E. Brown"" ""Few state systems carry more power than child protective services, which determines whether parents permanently keep or lose their children. Yet, it has for too long escaped close examination. This timely and important collection explores how child welfare systems interact and intersect with a range of other institutions and social problems--too often worsening the outcomes for the families they purport to help. ""-- ""Jennifer A. Reich, author of Fixing Families: Parents, Power, and the Child Welfare System"" ""This is the book our field has been waiting for. Policing Not Protecting Families ties together an analysis of the history and present functioning of the child welfare system, and larger questions of poverty governance in the United States. It views the child welfare system as one of many state systems that manage, surveilles and punishes disproportionately poor Black and brown populations, and examines the interrelations, both theoretical, and day-to- day practical, between the child welfare and other forms of policing. The book's final section offers different, competing views on paths forward, ensuring that this work can be translated into concrete action.""-- ""Mical Raz, author of What's Wrong with the Poor?: Psychiatry, Race, and the War on Poverty""